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Peso may rise vs dollar on remittance inflows ahead of Holy Week break

BW FILE PHOTO

THE PESO may appreciate versus the greenback this week due to expected remittance inflows for the Holy Week holidays and amid the recent decline in oil prices.

The local unit closed at P51.59 per dollar on Friday, weaker by 17 centavos from its P51.42-a-dollar finish on Thursday, based on Bankers Association of the Philippines data.

Still, it strengthened by eight centavos from its P51.67 finish a week earlier.

The peso opened at P51.45 versus the dollar on Friday, which was also its intraday best. Meanwhile, its weakest showing was at P51.62 against the greenback.

Dollars exchanged increased to $1.056 billion on Friday from $885.5 million on Thursday.

The peso was weaker on Friday due to fresh hawkish signals from the US Federal Reserve.

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard on Thursday said the central bank is already “behind the curve” in taming inflation, adding interest rates need to increase by another 3 percentage points by the end of 2022, Reuters reported.

The Fed in March raised interest rates by a quarter percentage point for the first time since 2018 to help fight rising inflation.

“I would like to get there in the second half of this year… We have to move,” to get ahead of inflation running at triple the Fed’s 2% target,” Mr. Bullard said.

Market players also priced in a statement from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) chief noting the local central bank’s readiness to respond to rising inflation risks, UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said.

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno on Tuesday said they are ready to take preemptive action if inflation expectations become at risk or disanchored. He said March consumer price index data released that day suggest inflation will likely be elevated in the coming months.

Headline inflation in March was at 4%, matching the upper end of the central bank’s 2-4% target. It was quicker than the 3% in February, showing the impact of the surge in oil prices caused by the Russia-Ukraine war.

This week, Philippine financial markets will be closed from Thursday to Friday in observance of Holy Week.

Mr. Ricafort said the peso could be supported by a possible increase in remittances for the coming holidays.

Meanwhile, Mr. Asuncion said participants will continue to monitor the war in Ukraine and its impact on oil prices.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov on Thursday said they have already incurred significant losses in Ukraine since it invaded the country on Feb. 24, Reuters reported.

The United Nations said more than a thousand civilians have been killed since the war started, and its true toll is likely to be much higher.

Oil futures on Friday increased by 2%, but still posted its second consecutive weekly decline as countries committed to plans of releasing crude from their stocks due to supply concerns caused by the war in Ukraine.

For this week, Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast range of P51.30 to P51.70 per dollar, while Mr. Asuncion expects the local unit to move within P51.10 to P51.60 — L.W.T. Noble with Reuters

How minimum wages compare across regions in March (2022)

(After accounting for inflation that month)

The infographic compares the current minimum wages set by the country’s Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board and the inflation-adjusted “real” minimum wages as of March based on latest data by the Philippine Statistics Authority. While the current minimum wages are determined at the regional level to account for factors such as companies’ capacity to pay and costs of living, real wages are obtained when general price increases (i.e., inflation rates) are accounted for. Real wages are 8.3%-14.8% lower in March than their respective current salaries.

How minimum wages compare across regions in March (2022)

How PSEi member stocks performed — April 8, 2022

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Friday, April 8, 2022.


Philippine trade year-on-year performance (Feb. 2022)

The country’s trade-in-goods deficit narrowed in February as exports grew by its fastest pace in six months on stronger demand, while growth in imports slowed. Read the full story.

Philippine trade year-on-year performance (Feb. 2022)

Real Madrid strolls past Getafe to close on title

MADRID — Real Madrid moved a step closer to the LaLiga title after easing past city rival Getafe 2-0 on Saturday thanks to goals from Casemiro and Lucas Vazquez.

With seven games left, Real extended their lead atop the standings to 12 points over Sevilla and 15 clear of Barcelona, who has two games in hand and face second-bottom Levante on Sunday.

Casemiro opened the scoring after 38 minutes, diving to head home a brilliant outside of the boot cross from Vinicius, Jr.

The young Brazilian winger was once again instrumental for Real Madrid, a constant threat to Getafe’s defense who created most of his teams chances from the left flank.

Totally in control, Real extended their lead in the second half as Vazquez finished coolly with a precise cross-shot after a nice exchange of passes with Rodrygo.

Getafe, who are four points away from the relegation zone and have only won two of their last eight league games, managed no shots on target.

“It wasn’t easy, we made it look easy,” Real Madrid captain Marcelo told Movistar Plus.

The experienced defender was one of several squad players who started as coach Carlo Ancelotti rotated his squad ahead of the Champions League quarter-final second leg against Chelsea on Tuesday.

“We ran a lot and played hard until the end,” Marcelo said.

“Everyone in the locker room needs to feel important, it was nice to see some of us who don’t have many minutes to enjoy themselves in front of our fans. We all have to be ready if needed at the end of the season.”

One player who did not get a warm reception was Welsh forward Gareth Bale, who came off the bench in the 74th minute to loud booing from the Real Madrid fans for his first appearance at Santiago Bernabeu in more than two years.

“It’s hard, it happened to many players in this club,” Marcelo said.

“Fans need to understand that we are all important. We are at the end of the season, we have a lot at stake, we have to help each other, our team mates. We are with him.” — Reuters

Mbappé on fire again; Neymar back to his best as PSG demolishes Clermont

PARIS — Kylian Mbappé and Neymar were on fire on Saturday as both scored hat tricks as Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) hammered Clermont 6-1 away to move a step closer to the Ligue 1 title.

Mbappé, who scored two and set up two last weekend against Lorient, struck both sides of the interval, just like Neymar, to take his league season tally to 20 and put PSG on 71 points from 31 games. They are 15 points ahead of second-placed Stade Rennais.

Clermont, who reduced the arrears through Jodel Dossou, is 17th on 28 points after their fifth defeat in a row.

Rennes is ahead of Olympique de Marseille on goal difference, after holding off Stade de Reims’s late challenge in a 3-2 away win earlier on Saturday.

In Clermont, PSG was unstoppable despite a mediocre first half.

Neymar put them ahead after six minutes, firing home with a low crossed shot after being set up by Lionel Messi.

Messi also set up the second for Mbappé, who beat Arthur Desmas from inside the box with a clinical half volley in the 19th minute.

Clermont, however, hit back just before half time when Saif-Eddine Khaoui’s cross was met by Dossou, who found the back of the net with a right-footed effort from the penalty spot.

PSG was then unstoppable in the second half.

Neymar put them 3-1 up with a penalty after a foul on Mbappé in the 72nd minute, two minutes before the French international added a fourth, dribbling past the keeper after being set up by Neymar to tap the ball into the empty net.

Six minutes later, Mbappé was at it again, benefiting from a nice combination between Messi and Neymar to curl a shot into the top corner.

Seven minutes from time, Mbappé rushed into the area and his pass was collected by Neymar who coolly finished it off from close range.

Earlier, Rennes grabbed a 3-0 lead thanks to Benjamin Bourigeaud’s first-half double and Martin Terrier’s second-half goal which took the team’s scoring tally to a league-best 67 — before PSG’s six took the capital side’s tally to 70.

The host fought back and reduced the arrears twice through a Maxime Busi strike and Jen’s Cajuste’s penalty, but Rennes’s defense held firm in the last 10 minutes of a pulsating encounter.

Marseille hosts Montpellier on Sunday. — Reuters

Scottie Scheffler clings to 3-shot Masters lead over Cameron Smith

ON A DAY when Tiger Woods fell further from contention at the Masters, perhaps it was kismet that Scottie Scheffler and Cameron Smith rose to the top of the heap at Augusta National Golf Club.

After making some of the most significant noise on the Professional Golfers Association (PGA) Tour this season, the pair will go head-to-head in the final round of the first major of the year with a chance to draw roars from behind the ropes.

Scheffler, playing his first tournament as the world’s No. 1-ranked player, posted a 1-under-par 71 on Saturday to get to 9-under 207 overall, but he watched his lead shrink to three shots at the third round at Augusta, GA.

Smith, the Australian who rocks a mullet under his cap, shot a 4-under 68 for the low round of the day on a chilly afternoon with few low scores. He took control of second place at 6 under and moved within striking distance of the lead.

Both Scheffler and Smith are aiming for their first career major title. Smith is coming off a victory at the Players Championship last month, while Scheffler has been on a meteoric rise after starting 2022 without a PGA Tour win to his name. He has won three tournaments in his past five starts and now has his sights on the biggest victory yet.

“I had a lot of fun out there,” Scheffler said. “I talked about, at the beginning of the week, that being in contention is what’s fun, so being in the lead is fun. When I’m in the lead, I’m trying to stay in the lead and not really overthink things. Just go out there and play golf.”

Woods shot a 6-over 78, the highest score of his career at Augusta, to drop to 7 over and a tie for 41st. Woods carded double bogeys at the fifth and 18th holes and three-putted four times in addition to a four-putt at No. 5.

“I just could not get a feel for getting comfortable with the ball. Posture, feel, my right hand, my release, I just couldn’t find it,” said Woods, playing in his first official tournament since his car accident 14 months ago that necessitated multiple leg surgeries. “Even as many putts as I had, you’d think I’d have figured it out somewhere along the line, but it just didn’t happen.”

Sungjae Im of South Korea is third at 4 under after carding a 1-under 71. Charl Schwartzel of South Africa and Shane Lowry of Ireland are tied for fourth at 2 under after both shot rounds of 73.

The only others still under par for the week are Justin Thomas (72) and Canada’s Corey Conners (72), tied for sixth at 1 under.

Scheffler looked as though he might run away with the tournament early in the round, but four bogeys over his second nine helped keep the Sunday drama intact. Scheffler’s tee shot at the par-4 18th flew too far left and was found in a bush after an extensive search. He had to take an unplayable lie and his third shot landed just over the green, leading to an up-and-down for bogey.

“You hate bogeying the last hole, but the way I bogeyed it for sure felt like a par,” he said. “So definitely good finish to the day and I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”

Scheffler led by as many as six shots during his first nine. He sandwiched four birdies, including a 17-foot birdie putt at the sixth, around one bogey at the fourth hole.

Schwartzel, playing in the final pairing with Scheffler, had an eagle 2 at No. 10 by holing out from 136 yards. His approach landed just past the pin, and he watched as it slowly spun back to the cup. That pushed him to 6 under, passing Smith to move alone into second.

A few groups ahead, Smith made his move with birdies at Nos. 10, 13 and 15. Smith tucked his approach at the par-5 15th to within 5 feet for a birdie, moving to 7 under.

Meanwhile, Scheffler landed in a bunker at the par-3 12th and missed the green on his second shot. His ensuing bogey briefly cut his lead to three shots. But Smith then hit the bunker off the tee at the par-3 16th and went on to how own bogey.

Despite the late misstep, Smith secured his spot in the final group with Scheffler on Sunday.

“I think it’s not going to be as windy (Sunday),” Smith said. “Typically here on Sunday, especially the back nine, you can use plenty of greens to your advantage and have plenty of birdie opportunities. Again, just stay aggressive into the greens and just keep hitting quality shots.”

Scheffler wrapped up Amen Corner with a short birdie putt at No. 13 to get back to 11 under, but he bogeyed the par-4 14th and par-5 15th, three-putting the latter.

Im, who led the field after 18 holes, went 4 over through his first six holes, but quietly came back with birdies at Nos. 8, 10, 12 and 15, the latter on a long putt from off the green. A long birdie putt at No. 17 put him back in third place.

After Schwartzel’s eagle, he made four bogeys over his last eight holes to lose ground on the lead. Lowry made two birdies early but bogeyed Nos. 9, 13 and 17.

Defending champion Hideki Matsuyama of Japan started the day at 3 under but struggled to a 5-over 77. He was tied for 14th at 2 over. — Reuters

Jazz look to wrap up no. 5 seed with win over Blazers

AS HE wrapped up his media interview on Friday night, Utah Jazz star Donovan Mitchell voiced a message of hope to a fanbase that had just seen his team blow a double-digit lead in the fourth quarter for the sixth time this season.

“I know it sucks. Fans, hang with us, man,” said Mitchell, whose team concludes the regular season on Sunday night on the road against the Portland Trail Blazers. “I promise you, we’ll be all right. I promise you.”

Mitchell & Co. and their disappointed followers, stunned by a 111-105 loss to the visiting Phoenix Suns after leading by 17 heading into the final quarter, can only hope that’s the case.

The Jazz (48-33) aim to bounce back when they oppose the Trail Blazers, losers of 10 straight. Portland (27-54) heads home after a 128-78 defeat to the Dallas Mavericks on Friday completed an 0-5 road trip.

Win or lose, Portland will finish the season as the sixth team from the bottom of the NBA standings, which will factor into its odds of winning the draft lottery next month.

“We’ve just got to stay together,” Portland’s Ben McLemore said after the 50-point defeat. “That’s all that we can do.”

Utah would clinch the No. 5 seed in the Western Conference playoffs with a Sunday win. The Nuggets (48-33) must beat the visiting Los Angeles Lakers and have the Jazz lose in order to leapfrog Utah as the Jazz own the tiebreaker over Denver due to a 4-0 season-series sweep.

Though the level of competition is night and day, the Jazz must avoid a mental collapse like the one that happened in the fourth quarter against the league-leading Suns, when they were outscored 36-13.

Mitchell had the roughest quarter, missing all six of his field-goal attempts, but the Jazz only made 3 of 20 shots as a team in the fizzling finish. That included 1-for-9 shooting from 3-point range.

It left many Utah fans wondering what is going on with the Jazz, who play splendidly for stretches and then seize up.

“I don’t think there’s some sort of voodoo hex floating around. Maybe there’s little anxieties,” Jazz coach Quin Snyder said. “I don’t think it’s some sort of magical thing that we’re doomed to lose a lead. I don’t see a team day to day that has some sort of psychological hurdle to overcome. It’s more about just flat-out execution, digging in and focusing and being able to get from one play to the next.”

Mitchell thinks it can be somewhat psychological, though he doesn’t want the Jazz to focus on that. He believes they need to loosen up and play more freely.

“It can be a mental thing, it can be… We just play tense,” Mitchell said. “You can sit here and say, ‘Oh, it’s mental’ — it may feel that way, it damn sure feels that way in the arena. But if we go there, then we’ve already lost the game at that point.”

The Blazers are just looking for something positive to take into the offseason.

“My thing is, I just want us to fight,” first-year Portland coach Chauncey Billups said. “There was a play there late in the (Dallas) game where I felt like — there were a couple players that I got on in our huddle because we kind of just caved in and gave up on the play. To me, that’s unacceptable.

“It’s an honor and a privilege to play in this league and to get minutes in this league. And no matter what is going on in the game, you’ve still got to continue to fight.” — Reuters

Daily challenge

Tiger Woods was not a happy camper as he headed to the podium in the aftermath of his disappointing third round at the Masters. To be sure, he wasn’t angry, either. He was more, well, tired after a long day battling his swing, his body, himself, en route to a worst-ever 78 in the sport’s premier tournament. Conditions were exactly how organizers wanted them to be, which is to say extremely difficult. And given his susceptibility to the cold and the wind a mere 14 months after he nearly lost his leg — his life, even — in what was described then as a “single-car accident,” he was ripe for failure.

“Failure” is relative, of course, and the fact that Woods still managed to finish and find himself with a better aggregate score than eight other players after 54 holes speaks volumes about the effort he made. He bogeyed the first hole in a portent of things to come, and, by the time he literally limped off the course yesterday, he left four three-putts and one four-putt in his wake. The bitter taste of his bogey-bogey-double-bogey finish was still in his mouth as he faced members of the media, and, yet, he still gamely answered every query that came his way. He didn’t look defeated at all.

Indeed, Woods gave his all in every shot he took (save, perhaps, for a hurried putt in the fifth hole), bent on showing his best even if he was clearly far from it — if for no other reason than because he demanded it of himself. Heading into the event, he reiterated his ultimate objective of claiming the Green Jacket a record-tying sixth time. Asked then if he thought he could win, he simply said, “I do.” Yesterday, he was obviously no longer entertaining such notions, but he remained defiant all the same. “Never give up,” he contended. “Always chase after your dreams.”

In the bigger context of life, Woods’ statement signified a clear movement of the goalpost. Which was why, even after all the missteps, he planned to show up for the fourth round. “I fight each and every day. Each and every day is a challenge,” he pointed out “Each and every day presents its own different challenges for all of us. I wake up and start the fight all over again.” Enough said.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Leni draws 220,000 supporters in Arroyo bailiwick

Aerial view of Vice President Leni Robredos campaign rally held in Pampanga on April 9 — VP LENI ROBREDO FB PAGE

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter
and Jaspearl Emerald G. Tan

VICE-PRESIDENT Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo on Saturday attracted more than 200,000 supporters — the biggest crowd in her presidential campaign so far — at a rally in Pampanga province north of the Philippines.

The opposition candidate urged her supporters in the province — the bailiwick of former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who has endorsed rival Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. — to step up their house-to-house initiatives to convince more undecided voters to vote for her in the May 9 presidential election.

Ms. Robredo is at a distant No. 2 in most presidential opinion polls, which the son and namesake of the late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos has dominated.

About 220,000 people joined the campaign rally on Saturday, her office said in a statement at the weekend, citing police data.

“It is very timely for people to educate others and fight fake news,” 27-year-old Dale Jewel Granados, one of those who attended Ms. Robredo’a political sortie, said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

He said he is using social media to campaign for her presidential bet, and had persuaded his family and relatives to vote for the opposition tandem of Ms. Robredo and her vice-presidential running mate, Senator Francis “Kiko” N. Pangilinan.

“The country has never seen anything like the Leni-Kiko campaign and the volunteerism associated with it,” Jean Encinas-Franco, a political science professor from the University of the Philippines, said in a Messenger chat.

“If Leni and Kiko win, this would certainly change the landscape of campaigns in the future,” she said, noting that Ms. Robredo’s supporters have been mostly youngsters.

The opposition tandem, which has criticized President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s stance on the South China Sea dispute, was also welcomed by supporters in Baler in Aurora, another province in Central Luzon.

Before visiting Central Luzon, they joined a campaign rally in Dagupan City in Pangasinan province that drew more than 60,000 supporters.

Pampanga, Aurora and Pangisinan are part of the so-called Solid North, a regional bloc in northern Philippines known for supporting the Marcoses.

“There is momentum on the side of the Robredo-Pangilinan team with their combination of big rallies and smaller townhall discussions and house-to-house campaigns,” Maria Ela L. Atienza, who also teaches political science at UP, said in a Viber message.

“Their lack of centralized campaign resources is compensated by the huge voluntary spirit of many supporters,” she added. “In a way, the campaign is being run not like traditional party campaigning but as a social movement.” 

Ms. Atienza said Ms. Robredo should keep the momentum until election day “because of the formidable resources of the frontrunners based on public surveys.” She should continue convincing undecided voters and monitor campaign activities, the actual elections and counting afterward, the analyst said.

“All areas and sectors, whether big or small in terms of voting numbers, count.”

Ms. Atienza said traditional politicians might mobilize their resources, sow disinformation in local campaigns and bribe voters. “Some of these tactics are already being employed by some local politicians. It is important to counter these negative styles of campaigning.”

Ms. Arroyo last week asked allies and influential clans in vote-rich Pampanga to support Mr. Marcos and his running mate Davao City Mayor and presidential daughter Sara Duterte-Carpio.

While local politicians usually focus on their survival, their endorsements energize the campaign of national candidates they support, Ms. Franco said. “This is the impact of synchronized elections.”

Ms. Franco and Ms. Atienza said youth voters are likely to be more critical of local endorsements.

“More voters, not just the youth, are becoming more discerning of the performance and trustworthiness of both local and national politicians,” Ms. Atienza said. “They do not just vote on the basis of regionalism or local loyalties.”

TWO-WAY RACE
Mr. Granados, the Kapampangan voter, said he is not bothered by Ms. Arroyo’s endorsement of the pro-administration tandem.

“I wasn’t surprised, knowing that most politicians who have a record of corruption are against the Robredo-Pangilinan tandem,” he said. “Everything is black and white for me and my decision is clear.”

Mr. Marcos kept his lead in Pulse Asia Research, Inc.’s presidential opinion poll last month, with 56% of Filipinos likely to vote for him. His rating fell by 4 percentage points.

Still in second place was Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo, whose rating rose by nine points to 24%.

Pulse Asia conducted the poll on March 17-21, after the first official presidential debate that Mr. Marcos failed to join.

Ms. Atienza in a separate Viber message said the presidential contest is shaping up to become a two-way race based on the Pulse Asia poll results, where Manila City Mayor Francisco “Isko” M. Domagoso was a far third. He is unlikely to catch up given his few endorsements, she added.

She said Mr. Domagoso’s followers would not automatically vote for Mr. Marcos or Ms. Robredo in case he withdraws from the race.

“Most of Isko’s programs are a bit similar to the current administration and he seems to be presenting himself as a continuity candidate instead of the opposition,” she said.

“Those who seem likely to vote for him may not vote for Vice-President Robredo if he withdraws but they may also not like Bongbong Marcos,” she added, noting that the Manila mayor had been attacking Mr. Marcos more than Ms. Robredo.

“It’s to the benefit of both Marcos and Robredo to have him there because any vote going to Domagoso is at least not to their nemesis,” said Hansley A. Juliano, a former political science professor studying at Nagoya University’s Graduate School of International Development in Japan. “It’s best to consider Domagoso the buffer candidate,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

It would be an insult to voters if Mr. Domagoso quits the presidential race, said Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a senior research fellow at the Ateneo de Manila University Policy Center. “Candidates must finish the race because that is their commitment to voters,” he said in an e-mail.

He said the election was “not a done deal,” with half of voters still undecided on whom to vote.

Comelec told to resolve Marcos cases this month

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE COMMISSION on Elections (Comelec) should resolve the disqualification cases against former Senator and presidential candidate Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. this month, as promised, to remain credible, political analysts said at the weekend.

“The new chairman needs to prove that Comelec will maximize its quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative independence by acting quickly and judiciously on these controversial cases,” Danilo A. Arao, lead convenor of election watchdog Kontra Daya, said in a Facebook Messenger chat. “They have to meet their self-imposed deadline because failing to do so is utterly unacceptable.”

The election body has yet to resolve several cases seeking to disqualify the son and namesake of the late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos from the presidential race.

Election Commissioner George Erwin M. Garcia earlier said Comelec would resolve the pending lawsuits by the third week of April.

Newly appointed Comelec Chairman Saidamen B. Pangarungan last month said they would fast-track the cases.

On Friday, a group of martial law victims filed a second “extremely urgent” motion for Comelec to resolve one of the cases pending with its Second Division. Delaying the case could complicate this year’s presidential election, they said.

“Only Comelec could give a definite answer if they can resolve these cases in time,” Dennis C. Coronacion, who heads the University of Santo Tomas Department of Political Science, said in a Viber message.

“At this point, I’m not optimistic that the election body is going to issue a ruling that is favorable to the petitioners,” he added.

The First Division earlier dismissed three consolidated lawsuits seeking to bar Mr. Marcos from the presidential contest, as it ruled that his failure to file his tax returns in the 1980s did not involve wicked, deviant behavior. The case is on appeal with the Comelec full court.

The Second Division rejected a similar petition in January, which ruled that Mr. Marcos did not mislead the public when he said in his certificate of candidacy that he was eligible to run for president. The case is also on appeal with the en banc.

Election Commissioner Aimee P. Ferolino had been accused of delaying one of the cases. She denied the allegations and said it was a minor issue that would not affect the credibility of the commission as a whole.

Retired Election Commissioner Maria Rowena V. Guanzon had accused her of delaying the case so her vote for disqualification would not count. She also said a senator from Davao was meddling in the case.

The Akbayan party-list group, among those that filed a disqualification petition, earlier asked Comelec to fast-track its decision.

Decisions by the Comelec en banc can be appealed before the Supreme Court.

Mr. Arao said Comelec should be decisive enough to act on these pending lawsuits against Mr. Marcos within the month, including those on appeal.

“The possibility looms that the next president’s tenure would be decided by the Supreme Court and that the vice president would have to take over if he gets disqualified,” he said. “That looming scenario is possible because of the delays at the Comelec First Division.” — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Storm Agaton, low pressure area affecting central Philippines 

THE FIRST tropical storm to enter the country this year, named Agaton, is bringing rains over eastern parts of central Philippines and is expected to linger over that area until Tuesday, the state weather agency reported on Sunday.   

It will remain almost stationary,weather forecaster Benison Esterase said in a briefing streamed through the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administrations (PAGASA) Facebook page.   

PAGASA has raised strong wind alerts and heavy rainfall warnings over Eastern Visayas, parts of Central Visayas, and northern parts of Caraga.  

Local and emergency response authorities have been alerted for possible flooding and landslides.   

Sea travel to and from several ports in the Visayas islands as well as the island provinces of Siargao and Dinagat in north-eastern Mindanao have been temporarily canceled.  

Three vessels carrying 212 passengers and crew were stranded at the Liloan and San Ricardo ports in Eastern Visayas as of Sunday 12 noon, according to the Philippine Coast Guard.   

Agaton made landfall over Calicoan Island, in Guiuan, Eastern Samar at 7:30 a.m. Sunday, PAGASA reported. 

Its center was located over the coastal waters of Guiuan as of 10 a.m., moving slowly with maximum sustained winds of 75 kilometers per hour (km/h) and gustiness of up to 105 km/h.    

Tropical storm Agaton is seen to weaken into a tropical depression by Tuesday as it interacts with a tropical cyclone that has been designated the international name Malakas, which is expected to just brush through the eastern side of the Philippines weather borderline.   

Malakas, to be given the local name Basyang once in the country, is unlikely to make landfall, according to Mr. Esterase.  

As of 10 a.m. Sunday, Malakas was still outside the Philippine area, located 1,570 km east of Mindanao. It was moving with maximum sustained winds of 85 km/h and gustiness of up to 105 km/h.    

Agaton is forecast to degenerate into a remnant low as Malakas begins to assimilate its circulation by late Tuesday or early Wednesday,PAGASA said.  

Meanwhile, a low pressure area has entered the central-western part of the Philippines early Sunday, bringing rains over the province of Palawan.   

It was located 1,085 km southwest of Puerto Princesa City as of 11 a.m. Sunday.   

Mr. Esterase said PAGASA is continuously monitoring the low pressure area although it has a low chance of developing into another storm. MSJ 

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